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United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Guild v Inland Revenue Commissioners [1992] UKHL 16 (27 February 1992)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1992/16.html
Cite as: [1993] Imm AR 112, [1992] 4 All ER 673, [1992] UKHL 16, 1993 SC (HL) 1, 1993 SLT 115, [1992] 1 WLR 1052

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JISCBAILII_CASE_TRUSTS

    Parliamentary Archives,
    HL/PO/JU/18/252

    Guild (Executor Nominate of the late James Young Russell)
    (Appellant) v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue (Respondents)

    (Scotland)

    JUDGMENT

    Die Jovis 27° Februarii 1992

    Upon Report from the Appellate Committee to whom was
    referred the Cause Guild (Executor Nominate of the late James
    Young Russell) against the Commissioners of Inland Revenue,
    That the Committee had heard Counsel as well on Monday the
    27tn as on Tuesday the 28th days of January last upon the
    Petition and Appeal of David James Guild W.S. of 5 Rutland
    Square, Edinburgh, praying that the matter of the
    Interlocutors set forth in the Schedule thereto, namely
    Interlocutors of the Lords of Session in Scotland of the First
    Division of the 15th day of March 1991, might be reviewed
    before Her Majesty the Queen in Her Court of Parliament and
    that the said Interlocutors might be reversed, varied or
    altered or that the Petitioner might have such other relief in
    the premises as to Her Majesty the Queen in Her Court of
    Parliament might seem meet; as upon the case of the
    Commissioners of Inland Revenue lodged in answer to the said
    Appeal; and due consideration had this day of what was offered
    on either side in this Cause:

    It is Ordered and Adjudged, by the Lords Spiritual and
    Temporal in the Court of Parliament of Her Majesty the Queen
    assembled, That the said Interlocutors of the 15th day of
    March 1991 complained of in the said Appeal be, and the same
    are hereby, Recalled and that the determination of the
    Commissioners of Inland Revenue of the 8th day of June 1990 be
    Set Aside: And it is further Ordered, That the said Cause be
    and the same is hereby remitted back to the Court of Session
    in Scotland to proceed as accords: And it is further Ordered,
    That the Respondents do pay or cause to be paid to the said
    Appellant the Expenses incurred by him in respect of the
    Action in the Court of Session and also the Costs incurred by
    him in respect of the said Appeal to this House, the amount of
    such last-mentioned Costs to be certified by the Clerk of the
    Parliaments if not agreed between the parties: And is is also
    further Ordered, That unless the Costs certified as aforesaid
    shall be paid to the Appellant entitled to the same within one
    calendar month from the date of the Certificate thereof the
    Cause shall be, and the same is hereby, remitted back to the
    Court of Session in Scotland or to the Judge acting as
    Vacation Judge to issue such Summary Process or Diligence for
    the recovery of such Costs as shall be lawful and necessary.

    Cler: Parliamentor:

    Judgment: 27 February 1992

    HOUSE OF LORDS

    GUILD

    (EXECUTOR NOMINATE OF THE LATE JAMES YOUNG RUSSELL)

    (APPELLANT)

    v.

    COMMISSIONERS OF INLAND REVENUE

    (RESPONDENTS)

    (SCOTLAND)

    Lord Keith of Kinkel
    Lord Roskill
    Lord Griffiths
    Lord Jauncey of Tullichettle
    Lord Lowry

    LORD KEITH OF KINKEL

    My Lords,

    The late James Young Russell ("the testator"), who resided
    in North Berwick, died on 11 September 1982 leaving a will dated
    7 April 1971 in which, after bequeathing a number of pecuniary
    legacies he provided as follows:

    "And I leave the whole, rest, residue and remainder of my
    said means and estate to the Town Council of North
    Berwick for the use in connection with the Sports Centre in
    North Berwick or some similar purpose in connection with
    sport and the receipt of the Treasurer for the time being of
    the Burgh of North Berwick shall be a sufficient receipt and
    discharge for my Executor."

    At the time of the testator's death the town council of
    North Berwick had ceased to exist as a result of the coming into
    force on 16 May 1975 of section 1(5) of the Local Government
    (Scotland) Act 1973. The provision of sporting and recreational
    facilities in North Berwick and the surrounding area became the
    responsibility of East Lothian District Council, set up under the
    Act. The Sports Centre in North Berwick had been the property
    of the Town Council and as a result of the Act it became vested
    in the District Council, which undertook its operation and
    management.

    In these circumstances the present appellant, who is
    executor nominate under the testator's will, raised an action of
    multiplepoinding and exoneration in the Court of Session, in the
    course of which he lodged an administrative claim to be ranked
    and preferred to the fund in medio, being the residue of the
    testator's estate, for the purpose of applying to the court for
    approval of a cy-pres scheme. Claims were also lodged by the
    testator's heirs on intestacy and the appellant's administrative

    claim was supported by East Lothian District Council. By
    interlocutor dated 5 April 1986 the Lord Ordinary, Lord Jauncey,
    ranked and preferred the appellant to the fund in medio in terms
    of his administrative claim, holding that the terms of the bequest
    of residue evinced a general charitable intention, and that there
    was nothing to indicate that the selection of the Town Council to
    administer the bequest involved delectus personae (Russell's
    Executor v. Balden,
    1989 S.L.T. 177). "

    The appellant then presented a petition to the Inner House
    for approval of a cy-pres scheme for the future administration of
    the bequest, and approval was duly granted on 14 June 1988.
    Nothing now turns on the terms of the cy-pres scheme so
    approved.

    Some time later, on 8 June 1990, the Commissioners of
    Inland Revenue, the present respondents, sent to the appellant a
    notice of determination to the effect that the transfer of value
    involved in the testator's bequest of residue was not an exempt
    transfer for the purposes of paragraph 10 of Schedule 6 to the
    Finance Act 1975. That was the Act, in force at the testator's
    death, which introduced capital transfer tax. There is no need for
    present purposes to consider the main provisions of the Act, since
    this appeal is concerned only with the exemption from the tax
    afforded to property which is given to charities. The exemption is
    contained in paragraph 10 of Schedule 6 to the Act, which
    provided so far as material:

    "(1) Subject to the provisions of Part II of this Schedule,
    transfers of value are exempt to the extent that the values
    transferred by them-

    (a) are attributable to property which is given to
    charities; and

    1. so far as made on or within one year of the death
      of the transferor, do not exceed £250,000.

    . . .

    (3) For the purposes of this paragraph property is given to
    charities if it becomes the property of charities or is held
    on trust for charitable purposes only."

    Under section 51 of the Act "charity" and "charitable" are stated
    to have the same meanings as in the Income Tax Acts. Section
    360(3) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1970 provides:

    "In this section "charity" means any body of persons or trust
    established for charitable purposes only."

    The appellant appealed against the respondent's
    determination to the First Division of the Court of Session as the
    Court of Exchequer in Scotland, under paragraph 7(3) of Schedule 4
    to the Act of 1975. On 15 March 1991 that court by a majority
    (Lord President Hope and Lord Mayfield, Lord McCluskey
    dissenting) refused the appeal and affirmed the determination. The
    appellant now appeals to your Lordships' House.

    - 2 -

    At one time it was being contended on behalf of the Crown
    that for the purpose of determining whether or not the exemption
    from tax of charitable bequests was available it was appropriate to
    have regard, not to the terms of the original bequest, but to the
    terms of the cy-pres scheme approved by the court. That
    contention, if correct, would have resolved the issue in favour of
    the Crown, since it is conceded that the purposes of the cy-pres
    scheme are not, strangely enough, charitable purposes only. The
    contention has, however, now been departed from. Before the First
    Division one of the arguments for the Crown was that during the
    period between the testator's death and the date when the cy-pres
    scheme became operative the residue of his estate was not "held
    on trust" within the meaning of paragraph 10(3) of Schedule 6 to
    the Act of 1975. That argument was unanimously rejected by
    their Lordships of the First Division and was not renewed before
    your Lordships' House. Counsel for the respondents did, however,
    argue another point upon which they were unsuccessful in the First
    Division, namely that the first part of the bequest failed to pass
    the requisite test since the purposes of the Sports Centre in North
    Berwick were not charitable purposes only. Counsel for the
    appellant, for their part, sought to overturn the decision of the
    First Division upon the point upon which they had, by a majority,
    failed there, namely whether or not the second part of the
    bequest, by its reference to "some similar purpose in connection
    with sport," was of such width as to admit the possibility of the
    funds being applied to provide some benefit of a non-charitable
    nature.

    A Scottish court, when faced with the task of construing
    and applying the words "charity" and "charitable" in a United
    Kingdom tax statute, must do so in accordance with the technical
    meaning of these words in English law: Commissioners for Special
    Purposes of the Income Tax v. Pemsel
    [1891] AC 531; I.R.C. v.
    City of Glasgow Police Athletic Association
    [1953] AC 380. For
    tax purposes, and for them alone, the English law of charity is to
    be regarded as part of the law of Scotland. Lord Jauncey's
    decision in the action of multiplepoinding proceeded upon the
    general law of Scotland as regards charities, and, as the Glasgow
    Police Athletic
    case shows, the decision under the corresponding
    English common law rules would have been different. However,
    the Glasgow Police Athletic case and that of I.R.C. v. Baddeley
    [1955] AC 572 led to the Recreational Charities Act 1958, and it
    is that Act which the appellant invokes in his claim to the
    charitable exemption from capital transfer tax.

    Section 1 of the Act provides:

    "(1) Subject to the provisions of this Act, it shall be and be
    deemed always to have been charitable to provide, or assist
    in the provision of, facilities for recreation or other leisure-
    time occupation, if the facilities are provided in the
    interests of social welfare:

    Provided that nothing in this section shall be taken to
    derogate from the principle that a trust or institution
    to be charitable must be for the public benefit.

    (2) The requirements of the foregoing subsection that the
    facilities are provided in the interests of social welfare shall
    not be treated as satisfied unless-

    - 3 -

    (a) the facilities are provided with the object of
    improving the conditions of life for the persons for
    whom the facilities are primarily intended; arid

    (b) either-

    (i) those persons have need of such facilities as
    aforesaid by reasons of their youth, age,
    infirmity or diablement, poverty or social and
    economic circumstances, or

    (ii) the facilities are to be available to the
    members or female members of the public at
    large.

    (3) Subject to the said requirement, subsection (1) of this
    section applies in particular to the provision of facilities at
    village halls, community centres and women's institutes, and
    to the provision and maintenance of grounds and building to
    be used for purposes of recreation or leisure-time
    occupation, and extends to the provision of facilities for
    those purposes by the organising of any activity."

    In the course of his argument in relation to the first branch
    of the bequest counsel for the respondents accepted that it
    assisted in the provision of facilities for recreation or other leisure
    time occupation within the meaning of subsection (1) of section 1
    of the Act, and also that the requirement of public benefit in the
    proviso to the subsection was satisfied. It was further accepted
    that the facilities of the Sports Centre were available to the
    public at large so that the condition of subsection (2)(b)(ii) was
    satisfied. It was maintained, however, that these facilities were
    not provided "in the interests of social welfare" as required by
    subsection (1), because they did not meet the condition laid down
    in subsection (2)(a), namely that they should be "provided with the
    object of improving the conditions of life for the persons for
    whom the facilities are primarily intended." The reason why it
    was said that this condition was not met was that on a proper
    construction it involved that the facilities should be provided with
    the object of meeting a need for such facilities in people who
    suffered from a position of relative social disadvantage. Reliance
    was placed on a passage from the judgment of Walton J. in I.R.C.
    v. McMullen
    [1978] 1 W.L.R. 664. That was a case where the
    Football Association had set up a trust to provide facilities to
    encourage pupils of schools and universities in the United Kingdom
    to play association football and other games and sports. Walton J.
    held that the trust was not valid as one for the advancement of
    education nor did it satisfy section 1 of the Act of 1958. He said
    at p. 675, in relation to the words "social welfare" in subsection
    (1):

    "In my view, however, these words in themselves indicate
    that there is some sort of deprivation - not, of course, by
    any means necessarily of money - which falls to be
    alleviated; and I think that this is made even clearer by the
    terms of subsection (2)(a). The facilities must be provided
    with the object of improving the conditions of life for
    persons for whom the facilities are primarily intended. In

    - 4 -

    other words, they must be to some extent and in some way
    deprived persons"

    When the case went to the Court of Appeal ([1979] 1 W.L.R. 130)
    the majority (Stamp and Orr L.JJ.) affirmed the judgment of
    Walton J. on both points, but Bridge L.J. dissented. As regards
    the Recreational Charities Act point he said at p. 142:

    "I turn therefore to consider whether the object defined by
    clause 3(a) is charitable under the express terms of section
    1 of the Recreational Charities Act 1958. Are the facilities
    for recreation contemplated in this clause to be 'provided in
    the interests of social welfare' under section 1(1)? If this
    phrase stood without further statutory elaboration, I should
    not hesitate to decide that sporting facilities for persons
    undergoing any formal process of education are provided in
    the interests of social welfare. Save in the sense that the
    interest of social welfare can only be served by the meeting
    of some social need, I cannot accept the judge's view that
    the interests of social welfare can only be served in relation
    to some 'deprived' class. The judge found this view
    reinforced by the requirement of subsection (2)(a) of section
    1 that the facilities must be provided 'with the object of
    improving the conditions of life for the persons for whom
    the facilities are primarily intended; . . . ' Here again I
    can see no reason to conclude that only the deprived can
    have their conditions of life improved. Hyde Park improves
    the conditions of life for residents in Mayfair and Belgravia
    as much as for those in Pimlico or the Portobello Road, and
    the village hall may improve the conditions of life for the
    squire and his family as well as for the cottagers. The
    persons for whom the facilities here are primarily intended
    are pupils of schools and universities, as defined in the trust
    deed, and these facilities are in my judgment unquestionably
    to be provided with the object of improving their conditions
    of life. Accordingly the ultimate question on which the
    application of the statute to this trust depends, is whether
    the requirements of section l(2)(b)(i) are satisfied on the
    ground that such pupils as a class have need of facilities for
    games or sports which will promote their physical education
    and development by reason either of their youth or of their
    social and economic circumstances, or both. The

    overwhelming majority of pupils within the definition are
    young persons and the tiny minority of mature students can
    be ignored as de minimis. There cannot surely be any doubt
    that young persons as part of their education do need
    facilities for organised games and sports both by reason of
    their youth and by reason of their social and economic
    circumstances. They cannot provide such facilities for
    themselves but are dependent on what is provided for them."

    In the House of Lords the case was decided against the Crown
    upon the ground that the trust was one for the advancement of
    education, opinion being reserved on the point under the
    Recreational Charities Act. Lord Hailsham of St. Marylebone L.C.
    said ([1981] AC 1 at p. 11):

    "I do not wish my absence of decision on the third or fourth
    points to be interpreted as an indorsement of the majority

    - 5 -

    judgments in the Court of Appeal nor as necessarily
    dissenting from the contrary views contained in the minority
    judgment of Bridge L.J."

    Reference was also made to the speech of Lord Denning in
    National Deposit Friendly Society Trustees v. Skegness U.D.C.
    [1959] A.C. 293, a case concerned with the meaning of "the
    advancement of ... social welfare" in section 2(1)(a) of the
    Rating and Valuation (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1955. Lord
    Denning said at pp. 322-323:

    "A person is commonly said to be engaged in 'social
    welfare' when he is engaged in doing good for others who
    are in need - in the sense that he does it, not for personal
    or private reasons - not because they are relatives or
    friends of his - but because they are members of the
    Community or of a portion of it who need help ... If a
    person is engaged in improving the conditions of life of
    others who are so placed as to be in need, he is engaged in
    'social welfare"'.

    Counsel for the appellant, for his part, relied on part of the
    judgment of Lord MacDermott L.C.J. in Commissioner of Valuation
    for Northern Ireland v. Lurgan Borough Council
    [1968] N.I. 104. A
    local authority which was owner and occupier of an indoor
    swimming pool claimed exemption from rates in respect of it
    under section 2 of the Valuation (Ireland) Amendment Act 1854 on
    the ground inter alia that it was used exclusively for the purposes
    of a recreational charity under the Act of 1958. A majority of
    the Court of Appeal held that this ground of exemption was
    established. Lord MacDermott said at p. 126, having referred to
    section 1 of the Act:

    "Here, I think, there can be no doubt that in the
    construction, equipment and running of this hereditament the
    Council has provided facilities for recreation. The big
    question is - have these facilities been provided 'in the
    interests of social welfare'? 'Social welfare' is a somewhat
    vague and uncertain expression. Taken by itself I still
    incline to the view I expressed in National Deposit Friendly
    Society Trustees v. Skegness Urban District Council,
    that it
    signifies something more than 'social well-being'. In the
    present context, however, I do not think it necessary to
    speculate as to the precise distinction to be drawn between
    these two expressions as subsection (2) of section 1, though
    not exactly a definition, provides in effect, in my opinion,
    the essential elements which must be present if a state of
    social well-being is to amount to 'social welfare' as that
    expression is used in the section. These elements are to be
    drawn from paragraphs (a) and (b) of subsection (2). By (a)
    the facilities must be provided with the object of improving
    the conditions of life for the persons for whom the facilities
    are primarily intended. To my mind the provision of the
    hereditament satisfies that requirement. The primary
    object, even if confined to the phraseology of the preamble
    to the Act of 1846, was clearly to improve the conditions
    of life of the inhabitants of the Borough of Lurgan and if,
    as I have held, this was done in a manner which enured for
    the benefit of the public at large, paragraph (a) would still

    - 6 -

    be complied with. It is clear from the terms of the case
    stated that the hereditament was not only provided to
    improve the conditions of life for those for whom it was
    primarily intended, but that in fact it has done so. The full
    use which has been made of the hereditament since its
    inauguration is, I think, cogent evidence that it has filled a
    need in the life of the community and has added to the
    enjoyment of its members.

    "The second requirement to be satisfied is one or other of
    the subparagraphs of paragraph (b). Of these alternatives I
    am of opinion that subparagraph (i) does not apply so as to
    support the Council's case. There is nothing in the case
    stated that I can see which shows that those benefited have
    need of the facilities provided by reason of any of the
    specific factors mentioned, ie. youth, age, infirmity or
    disablement, poverty or social and economic circumstances.
    But subparagraph (ii), on the views I have already expressed,
    is applicable for the facilities of the hereditament are
    available to the public at large."

    In this passage Lord MacDermott makes the point that
    section 1(2) of the Act does not exactly contain a definition but
    that it does state the essential elements which must be present if
    the requirement that the facilities should be provided in the
    interests of social welfare is to be met. It is difficult to envisage
    a case where, although these essential elements are present, yet
    the facilities are not provided in the interests of social welfare.
    Nor do I consider that the reference to social welfare in
    subsection (1) can properly be held to colour subsection (2)(a) to
    the effect that the persons for whom the facilities are primarily
    intended must be confined to those persons who suffer from some
    form of social deprivation. That this is not so seems to me to
    follow from the alternative conditions expressed in subsection
    (2)(b). If it suffices that the facilities are to be available to the
    members of the public at large, as subparagraph (ii) provides, it
    must necessarily be inferred that the persons for whom the
    facilities are primarily intended are not to be confined to those
    who have need of them by reason of one of the forms of social
    deprivation mentioned in subparagraph (i).

    The fact is that persons in ail walks of life and all kinds of
    social circumstances may have their conditions of life improved by
    the provision of recreational facilities of suitable character. The
    proviso requiring public benefit excludes facilities of an undesirable
    nature. In my opinion the view expressed by Bridge L.J., as he
    then was, in I.R.C. v. McMullen is clearly correct and that of
    Walton J. in the same case is incorrect. Lord MacDermott in the
    Lurgan case plainly did not consider that the category of persons
    for whom the facilities were primarily intended was subject to any
    restriction. The observations of Lord Denning in the Skegness case
    are not relevant in the present context. I would therefore reject
    the argument that the facilities are not provided in the interests
    of social welfare unless they are provided with the object of
    improving the conditions of life for persons who suffer from some
    form of social disadvantage. It suffices if they are provided with
    the object of improving the conditions of life for members of the
    community generally. The Lord President, whose opinion contains
    a description of the facilities available at the Sports Centre which

    - 7 -

    it is unnecessary to repeat, took the view that they were so
    provided. I respectfully agree, and indeed the contrary was not
    seriously maintained.

    It remains to consider the point upon which the appellant
    was unsuccessful before the First Division, namely whether or not
    the second branch of the bequest of residue, referring to "some
    similar purpose in connection with sport", is so widely expressed as
    to admit of the funds being applied in some manner which falls
    outside the requirements of section 1 of the Act of 1958. Counsel
    for the appellant invited your Lordships, in construing this part of
    the bequest, to adopt the benignant approach which has regularly
    been favoured in the interpretation of trust deeds capable of being
    regarded as evincing a charitable intention. That approach is
    appropriate where the language used is susceptible of two
    constructions one of which would make it void and the other
    effectual. (I.R.C. v. McMullen [1981] AC 1, per Lord Hailsham
    of St. Marylebone at p. 14; Weir v. Crum-Brown [1908] AC 162,
    per Lord Loreburn L.C. at p. 167). It was argued for the
    respondents that the benignant approach was not apt in the present
    case, since the question was not whether the trust was valid or
    invalid, but whether it qualified for exemption from tax by virtue
    of the Act of 1958. But the importation into Scots law, for tax
    purposes, of the technical English law of charities involves that a
    Scottish judge should approach any question of construction arising
    out of the language used in the relevant instrument in the same
    manner as would an English judge who had to consider its validity
    as a charitable gift. The English judge would adopt the benignant
    approach in setting about that task, and so the Scottish judge
    dealing with the tax consequences should do likewise.

    The matter for decision turns upon the ascertainment of the
    intention of the testator in using the words he did. The adjective
    "similar" connotes that there are points of resemblance between
    one thing and another. The points of resemblance here with the
    Sports Centre cannot be related only to location in North Berwick
    or to connection with sport. The first of these is plainly to be
    implied from the fact of the gift being to the Town Council of
    North Berwick and the second is expressly stated in the words
    under construction. So the resemblance to the Sports Centre
    which the testator had in mind must be ascertained by reference
    to some other characteristics possessed by it. The leading
    characteristics of the Sports Centre lie in the nature of the
    facilities which are provided there and the fact that those
    facilities are available to the public at large. These are the
    characteristics which enable it to satisfy section 1 of the Act of
    1958. Adopting so far as necessary a benignant construction, I
    infer that the intention of the testator was that any other purpose
    to which the Town Council might apply the bequest or any part of
    it should also display those characteristics. In the result I am of
    opinion, the first part of the bequest having been found to be
    charitable within the meaning of section 1 of the Act of 1958,
    that the same is true of the second part, so that the funds in
    question qualify for exemption from capital transfer tax.

    My Lords, for these reasons I would allow the appeal and
    set aside the determination of the respondents. I would allow the
    appellant his costs here and his expenses before the Court of
    Session.

    - 8 -

    LORD ROSKILL

    My Lords,

    I have had the advantage of reading in draft the speech
    prepared by my noble and learned friend, Lord Keith of Kinkel,
    and for the reasons which he gives I would allow the appeal.

    LORD GRIFFITHS

    My Lords,

    I have had the advantage of reading the speech of my noble
    and learned friend, Lord Keith of Kinkel, and for the reasons
    which he gives I, too, would allow the appeal.

    LORD JAUNCEY OF TULLICHETTLE

    My Lords,

    I have had the advantage of reading in draft the speech of
    my noble and learned friend, Lord Keith of Kinkel, and for the
    reasons which he gives I, too, would allow the appeal.

    LORD LOWRY

    My Lords,

    I have had the advantage of reading in draft the speech of
    my noble and learned friend, Lord Keith of Kinkel, and for the
    reasons which he gives I, too, would allow the appeal.

    - 9 -


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